Difference between revisions of "Washington Conference on International Terrorism"
(Another key conference according to Hermann) |
(t) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Deep political connections== | ==Deep political connections== | ||
− | The 1984 conference succeeded in assembling as large and prestigious a group of participants and audience as the 1979 [[ | + | The 1984 conference succeeded in assembling as large and prestigious a group of participants and audience as the 1979 [[Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism]]. Leading addresses were given by [[U.S. Secretary of State]] [[George Shultz]], UN Ambassador [[Jeane Kirkpatrick]] (of [[Le Cercle]]), and [[Israeli Prime Minister]] [[Yitzhak Rabin]]. Also in attendance were [[Daniel Patrick Moynihan]], [[Midge Decter]], [[Paul Laxalt]], [[Edwin Meese]], [[Jack Kemp]], and media stars [[Daniel Schorr]] and [[Ted Koppel]]. As in 1979, the conference featured terrorism as the new focus of Israeli, U.S., and European foreign policy concern, and the participants chosen assured the uncontested reiteration of the Western model, with a strong bent toward its extremist version. The Palestinians, with their alleged Soviet "sponsors," were held responsible for almost every (retail) terrorist attack cited by the body of experts in attendance, who, among others, included [[Michael Ledeen]], [[Claire Sterling]], [[Ray S. Cline]], [[Arnaud de Borchgrave]], [[Lord Chalfont]] and [[Jillian Becker]]. |
+ | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
− | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Revision as of 09:01, 15 November 2015
File:Wcit-book.jpg | |
Date | 1984 |
---|---|
Location | Washington D.C., USA |
Perpetrators | Benjamin Netanyahu, Jonathan Institute |
Description | Another important conference in establishing the "War On Terror" |
The Washington Conference on International Terrorism was convened by the Jonathan Institute in 1984. It was a follow up to the 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism. It was followed up by a book from Benjamin Netanyahu, about which one reviewer observed: "There are some low-level oddities about this book that should be noted quickly. Very few efforts are made to convince readers of what is being said: sources and figures are never cited; abstractions and generalizations pop up everywhere; and, except for three essays on Islam, historical argument is limited to the single proposition that terrorism has never before presented such a threat to "the democracies.' I was also struck that the verb in the book's subtitle, How the West Can Win, doesn't seem to have an object: Win what? one wonders. So great is the number of contributors, so hortatory the tone, so confident and many the assertions, that in the end you retain little of what has been said, except that you had better get on with the fight against terrorism, whatever Netanyahu says it is."[1]
Deep political connections
The 1984 conference succeeded in assembling as large and prestigious a group of participants and audience as the 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism. Leading addresses were given by U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz, UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick (of Le Cercle), and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Also in attendance were Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Midge Decter, Paul Laxalt, Edwin Meese, Jack Kemp, and media stars Daniel Schorr and Ted Koppel. As in 1979, the conference featured terrorism as the new focus of Israeli, U.S., and European foreign policy concern, and the participants chosen assured the uncontested reiteration of the Western model, with a strong bent toward its extremist version. The Palestinians, with their alleged Soviet "sponsors," were held responsible for almost every (retail) terrorist attack cited by the body of experts in attendance, who, among others, included Michael Ledeen, Claire Sterling, Ray S. Cline, Arnaud de Borchgrave, Lord Chalfont and Jillian Becker.
Known Participants
18 of the 19 of the participants already have pages here:
Participant | Description |
---|---|
Moshe Arens | suspected deep state operative |
Jillian Becker | UK "terror expert" |
Arnaud de Borchgrave | Spooky journalist |
Ray Cline | Senior CIA, spoke at the 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism |
Paul Johnson | Influential author in US and British right-wing politics |
Alun Gwynne Jones | UK politician, Cercle visitor, the only person who spoke more than once at the JCIT |
Elie Kedourie | Visitor to the Washington Conference on International Terrorism who wrote a paper for the 1982 Bilderberg |
Jack Kemp | Closely associated with the hawkish wing of the Republican Party. |
Jeane Kirkpatrick | Neocon "terror expert", US Ambassador to the UN, Washington Conference on International Terrorism... |
Charles Krauthammer | Single Bilderberger Washington Conference on International Terrorism visitor |
Michael Ledeen | "Washington's neoconservative guru", Bilderberg, Le Cercle... |
Bernard Lewis | Spooky academic who attended the 1979 and 2002 Bilderbergs, as well as the Washington Conference on International Terrorism. |
Daniel Moynihan | US diplomat who pushed the "war on terror" |
Benjamin Netanyahu | Israeli deep politician who has been Prime Minister of Israel |
Yitzhak Rabin | Prime Minister of Israel, assassinated in office in 1995 |
Jean-François Revel | |
George Shultz | US Cold warrior who attended the 1984 Washington Conference on International Terrorism |
Claire Sterling | US "terror expert" who promoted the "War on Terror" |
Witnesses
Witness | Description |
---|---|
Midge Decter | Neocon "polemical powerhouse" |
Jack Kemp | Closely associated with the hawkish wing of the Republican Party. |
Ted Koppel | |
Paul Laxalt | Nevada politician with significant ties to organized crime. One of Ronald Reagan's closest friends in politics. |
Edwin Meese | United States Attorney General in the 1980s, during the Reagan Administration. |
Daniel Moynihan | US diplomat who pushed the "war on terror" |
Daniel Schorr |